Andrei Alexandrescu, author of The D Programming Language, provides a fresh perspective on iteration and proposes a new approach to iteration that builds on the strengths of abstractions defined by other languages and libraries. The proposed framework is sensible and expressive, yet one that is simple and obvious in hindsight.

From the author of

From the author of

Executive Summary

Lisp pioneered forward iteration using singly-linked lists. Later object-oriented container designs often used the Iterator design pattern to offer sequential access using iterators. Though iterators are safe and sensible, their interface prevents definition of flexible, general, and efficient container-independent algorithms. For example, you can't reasonably expect to sort, organize as a binary heap, or even reverse a container by just using its Iterator. At about the same time, C++'s Standard Template Library (STL) defines its own conceptual hierarchy of iterators and shows that container-independent algorithms are possible using that hierarchy. However, STL iterators are marred by lack of safety, difficulty of usage, difficulty of definition, and a very close relationship to C++ that limits adoption by other languages. I propose an API that combines the advantages of Iterator and STL, and I bring evidence that the proposed abstraction is sensible by implementing a superset of STL's algorithms in the D language's standard library.

This article is rather long because I'm attempting not to alienate those unfamiliar with the Standard Template Library, the Iterator design pattern, or functional languages.